14—The Daily Collegian Monday, March 24, 1980 Farr.• gender identity key Roles may be problem By STACY KRUSCH Daily Collegian Staff Writer The most severe kinds of problems in our society are those of gender identity, Jo-Ann Hunter Farr said in a speech Friday sponsored by the Homophiles of Penn State. Farr, a clinical psychologist, defined gender identity as the private ex perience of one's gender role. "Problems in gender identity can start as young as 4 and 5 years old, while some encounter problems even after they already have been married," Farr said. A person with a gender identity conflict does not feel comfortable in his or her body, she said. "A person like this has one body, but psychologically they experience themself as the other sex," Farr said. Sometimes there is a reason, she said. ° GODSPELL Dinner theatre ,"" °144 • April 3-4-5 Sheraton Penn k State Inn 3% W .. ~, - t 240 S. Pugh Street : for ticket information call 238-1056 KEEP HAPPY VALLEY BEAOTITUL. DON'T LITTER. HI WAY PIZZA PUB nn eolleur 0 C. Corner of College & Heister Try our Luncheon Specials something different every day! STUDENT SPECIALS , Monday & Tuesday Nights 50' off 16" Pizza and small sodas 15' with this purchase. serving -- Pepsi-Cola *************************************************************** "INTO VIEW" r THE 1 FINAL VIEW ... I Ala 411.1 4******************* 237-5718 Undergraduate Student Government Other times it is a mystery why people have the feeling that they are in the wrong body. Problems can occur in the early development of the fetus that will cause gender identity conflicts later in life, she said. The minute a child is born the doctor stares between the child's legs and determines its sex, shouting either "boy" or "girl" throughout the delivery room, Farr said, and from that moment on behavioral treatment is determined. Names and colors are chosen ac cordingly, and the gender role of the newborn has been established, Farr said. The child has fallen into the gender role that later may prove to be un suitable and therefore cause psychological and emotional problems. "Sex transfer surgery in some cases "ISSUES, SEEN AND UNSEEN" HUB MAIN LOUNGE MONDAY, MARCH 24th R-034 *************************************** may prove successful," Farr said. 'lt provides the physiological changes necessary to make the body agree with how the person feels, she said. This alternative is usually extremely expensive, but for some it may be the only alternative, she said. "There is long term and extensive psychotherapy prior to this type of surgery. No one does it just for kicks. "After the surgery there still are problems. Problems with family and friends are some of the most common. There is also the need for counseling because of frequent severe depression," Farr said. "Hope for the future is that research will go on in hope that the success of these operations will become even greater than it is now," she said. CHIMES HONOR SOCIETY Ww 0, ,M TTh enS, OLVI, rtneSS Wee -/ c . applications now available for 1980 membership at HUB desk {tin tleiteniC tQincii • Requirements: must be sth, 6th or 7th 32 4 thr t y 3.. a0 R , eseries: term G.P.A. 3.3 or above : • Chimes encourages leadership, service activities and high academic , Mon., Mar. 24: -.Belly dancing instructions plus Dr. Wickersham standards speaking on female sexuality. U• 135 Due - April 9, 1980 . 6:30 p.m. HUB Ballroom' ::: Tues., Mar. 25: Make-overs and skin care discussion by a make- : up artist from Diane von Furstenburg Comestics . ATTENTION . ... followed by a Spring Fashion Show presented by Anne Abbott with fashions contributed by Mr. Charles, Bumble Bee, Lady Bug, Mode and , The Racquet Shop. `/ CouNSELORS & 7:00 p.m. HUB Ballroom • Wed., Mar. 26: Contemporary Cooking Program by representa spEciAusTs tion from La Chaumiere and Sophia Tsong. 6:30 p.m. 301 HUB Beautiful Coed Camp in Pocono Mountains .(;; Fri., Mar. 28: Carol Wright featuring a question and answer Salary Range: $5OO-$l2OO period on Law School, legal services and law op- Eugene Bell, Assistant Director, will be interviewing on campus portunities for women. • Thursday, March 27, 1980, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. 3:30 p.m. HUB Assembly Room For further information and appointments go to the Sat.,,Mar. 29: Battle of the Sexes Superstars Competition fea- Student Employment Office, 109 Boucke, or contact: turfing past and present Penn State athletes and e: • faculty. NEW JERSEY YMHA-YWHA CAMPS . 1:00 p.m. White Building 21 Plymouth Street Sun., Mar. 30: Congresswoman Bella Abzug speaking •on Fairfield, New Jersey 07006 women's role in the 80's. 201 -575-3333 8:00 p.m. Eisenhower Aud. -' 7:00 P.M. CLASSIFIED ADS ....._.,. ..,.. ..,.. Free U extends band deadline • The deadline for bands to submit audition tapes for-Gentle Thursday has been extended to Thursday. Turn tapes in at the Free University office in 223 HUB. For more information, call 237-1271. . • The Conversant Program needs volunteers to make an international friend and help him or her practice English. For more information, call 863-1604 or stop in at 305 Sparks. • The Women's Resource Center will train, new volunteers beginning Wednesday at the resource center, 103 E. Beaver Ave. The training is held on six successive Wednesday nights and will . feature films, speakers, and topics including listening and helping skills and crisis intervention. Volunteers are asked to make a one-year commitment. Ap- plications for the training, may be picked up at the center, and should be turned in by today. • The Penn State Slavic Chorus invites all interested persons who enjoy singing to join them. Prior knowledge of a Slavic language is not required. Meetings will be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m., beginning Wednesday, in 236 Chambers. • The Newman Student Association of the. Penn State Catholic Center is having a roller skating night tonight. Meet at 8 in the large lounge of Eisenhower Chapel. • The Campus 4-H Club will meet at 7 tonight in 301 Agriculture Ad. ministration Building. • The HUB Noontime Concert Series will present Red Rose Cotillion at noon today in the HUB main • The Rev. Marni Politte of the lounge. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship will speak on "God Male/Female; So What?" from noon to 1:30 p.m. ; today in the informal lounge &- Eisenhower Chapel. The program is the *third part of the Brown Bag Luncheon Dialogue on "The Feminine Aspects of God." • The Judo Club will meet at B:3C tonight in the wrestling room of the Intramural Building. • The Speech Communications Undergraduate Forum will meet at 7 tonight in 309 Sparks. General studies and broadcast option students are: welcome. Rep. to revise legislation for renovations By PHILIP GUTIS Daily Collegian Staff Writer 4I State Rep. Gregg Cunningham, R- Centre Region, has said he will be introducing revised legislation to provide the University with $2 million to fund federally required building renovations for handicapped persons. Cunningham said that. when he was getting ready to introduce his original amendment to provide the University with $1.5 million, he ran into op position from the chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, ichard McClatchy, R-Montgomery County, and the governor's office. * A ' problem arose with stan , dardization of the figures that had been submitted to Cunningham and the figures the state-owned schools had provided to the governor; he said. The figures used by the governor's 'office to determine the amount of Stromboli & Salad $1.95 119 S. Atherton An all-time favorite in State College Back by Popular Demand! Gus' Famous CHEESE STEAK SANDWICH with its special sauce d.zesly.melted Also Hamburgers and French Fries NOW at— * • LL F s GREEK • PIZZA E. College Ave. Phone 237-8616 Home Delivery Every Day Starting at 4:30 a story of chanee BEING THERE •ENDS THURS • 7:15-9:30 $1.50 MAT AT 2:30 WED. 12:15 2:30.4:45 7:15.9:30 LPPI #l,-;„:5,:_,,,,, , ,v,i..:, ,, - , -.4,.,::,:,:-... , !:::::,::, , :, i y..,:.„-,..,,, , ,,,,,. :? ,,.,., L . , ;ititie ., : ,. ; ..- 1 :i, • r 1 ,1: :,s)'..--.., . . „ ' Sl•i 237.2112' ENDS THUDS 7:45-9:30 - FiejERX STARTS FRIDAY SHOWS NIGHTLY 7:30 & 9:30 MATINEE FRIDAY 2:30 rt'; DUSTIN HOFFMAN Kramer Kramer SHOWS NIGHTLY 7: . 30& 10:05 MATINEES SAT & SUN 2:30 110-StATEI'• College Ave; , • money needed for the state-owned schools were determined by engineers from the state Department of Education, Cunningham said. "The Department of Education engineers had not had the opportunity to confirm that the same standards and specifications that had been employed to work up the figures in the bill for the state-owned schools may or may not have been used to work up the figures for the state related institutions," he said. His new bill, would grant the University $2 million and lesser amounts to the other state-related schools Pitt, Temple and Lincoln to make buildings more easily ac cessible to handicapped people, he said. The Federal Handicapped Access bill, recently enacted by Congress, requires public buildings, and i t iDg&k 4 4Svsqt'4lll 237-6191 S PA .t PITTSBURGH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA AT 2:45 WED 12:30 2:15.4-5:45 7:30.9:15 !RI 91 TIL O P.M Eisenhower Auditorium MICHAEL TILSON THOMAS, conducting Ilana Vered, pianist Friday, March 28, 8:30 p.m. All-Stravinsky Program Symphonies of Wind Instruments Variations (Aldous Huxley in Memorium) The Symphony of Psalms with the Penn State Singers Le Sacre du Printemps (Rite of Spring) A limited number of tickets on sale for this performance Saturday, March 29, 8:30 p.m. Program Mendelssohn Overture, The Hebrides Rachmaninoff Rhapsody on a theme of Paganini for Piano and Orchestra, Ilana Vered, pianist Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 5 in E Minor, opus 64 TICKET INFORMATION BOX OFFICE SALE STARTS TUESDAY, MARCH 25 HUB booth and Eisenhower Auditorium 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. PHONE ORDERS ON VISA/MC ACCEPTED: (814) 863-0225 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. days of sale Student/Child/Sr. Cit. $5.50, $4.00, $2.50 General Sale $B.OO, $6.00, $4.50 erie especially campuses of educational institutions, to renovate buildings to accommodate handicapped persons, Cunningham said. The original amendment and the new legislation are necessary because, for some unknown reason, the state-related universities were not included in the original bill, Cunningham said. However, the state should also be required to fund the renovations to the state-related universities because buildings on those campuses are also owned by the General State Authority, he said. "It is important, in light of the fact that the Commonwealth of Penn sylvania owns these buildings, that the Commonwealth help defray the costs of making these renovations," Cunningham said. A meeting with the state-related rig t : ' ' el , 00 0* universities and engineers from the Department of Education has been set up to decide on the amount of money needed to complete the renovations, he said. Cunningham said he plans to in troduce a separate bill which will provide the funding for the state related universities, once figures agreeable to the Department of Education are determined. The figures on which Cunningham based his last amendnient were estimates provided by the schools, which have now been re-evaluated. Penn State would require $2 million, Pitt $l.l million, Temple $790,000 and Lincoln $350,000 to comply with the federal legislation, he said. Those figures were determined by the schools and are subject to change N. 4 , el t p N. 465 4 S q : 7 NTIME CONCERT TUESDAY 12:00 NOON HUB Main Lounge P. • w t , - 1 . ‘ ,_t„ ~ ...-:..:,:,... , '.. , ,i.:ii::.:......, \' ' ' ''\ '` . •Ni4tl/4w.''''':'.:'7'....''''...7:zr 4A)‹.•kk,:::'-.-.''''''' Monday Evening 6:00 el) WEATHER•WORLD gilt I LOVE LUCY COD at) (0) a NEWS JOKER'S WILD (1) SANFORD AND SON 6:30 aij GROWING YEARS CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS Guest Charo: (E) NBC NEWS CO ABC NEWS TIC TAC DOUGH att) at CBS NEWS ODD COUPLE 7:00 a) MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT M.A.S.H. (I)Ceja DAILY NUMBER ® FACE THE MUSIC IN TIC TAC DOUGH ILD HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Cit MATCH GAME 7:01 ap NEWLYWED GAME Ce P.M. MAGAZINE a FACE THE MUSIC 7:3OCC DICK CAVETT SHOW siandoctor'sentirelifeisturnedupsidedownby OMOVIE-(DRAMA-MYSTERY)•• "Phantom a ALL IN THE FAMILY the Bolshevik Revolution. (Conclusion; 2 hrs.) of the Opera" 1943 Nelson Eddy, Claude CCU FAMILY FEUD 0 AMERICAN FILM THEATRE 'The Maids' Rains. Violinist in Paris Opera goes mad trying (le TIC TAC DOUGH Glenda Jackson and SUsannah York star in this to advance daughter's career as singer and a DATING GAME taleof twosisters,boundtoeachotherandtheir haunts the opera house. (2 hrs.) NO JOKER'S WILD employer by an Intense love-hate 0 THREE STOOGES ID NEWS relationship. 12:15 0 POLICE STORY 'A Cry For Justice' After 7:58 CD NEWSBRIEF woo M.A.S.H.Ano-nonsensecolonol,who being blasted at close range with a sawed-off 8:00 CD ALL CREATURES GREAT AND SMALL is notorious as a hard-nosed disciplinarian, shotgun, a police officer is left with a memory 'Attendant Problems'LamblngtimeintheYork- visits the 4077th during an outbreak of April gap of the incident even though he saw his es shire Dales is hard but rewarding work. James Fools' Day prankaterism. sailants clearly. (Repeat) and Siegfried, however, have a worrying 9:30 CENIDEiD FLOPollyHolliday,thefun-loving Flo 12:30 0 L.A.T.E.R. Eoblem. of 'Alice,' winds up the surprised owner of a 0 TWILIGHT ZONE MI CROSS WITS rundown roadhouse. (Premiere) 1:00 0 MOV I E -(DRAMA)••• "Walkabout" 1971 ® LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE A con 10:00 CD AMERICAN SHORT STORY Shelley Duvall JeannleAgutter,LucionJohn.Lost inthewilder artist convinces Jonathan Garvey that he's playa an ugly duckling who is transformed into ness of Australia, two children rely on a young good enough to be a wrestling champion end an alluring vamp in F. Scott Fitzgerald's 'Bar- Aborigine in order to survive. (118 mins.) getsGarvey'sWalnut Groveneighborstobeton nice BobsHerHair.RonHowardandAmylrving au , TOMORROW Host: Tom Snyder. Guest: it.(Repeat: 80 mins.) star In Sherwood Anderson's story of a young Anne Murray. (80 mins.) • Cii) THAT'S INCREDIBLE manfindingromanceetaracetrack,'l'mAFoor. 1:30 00 NEWS 10 NEWS SPECIAL ao mins.) 2:00 0 JOE FRANKLIN SHOW ' WOO IT'SARBORDAY,CHARLIE BROWN ®0 NEWS 103 MOVIE -(WESTERN-DRAMA)•• "All Mine Charließrown'alittlesisterSally'slackofknow- CS an LOU GRANT Pay for a news story? to Give" 1956 GlynisJohns,CameronMitchell. ledge about the significance of Arbor Day in- Tharscheckbookjournalismanditbecomesan The saga of a brave pioneer family and their spiresothermembersof thePeanuteclantoset Issue when a source wants money to document hardships in early Wiscondin. (2 hrs.) . . 94 4 L L 44€ Sk to* to W*1\444:14 V $ 114 4.tii;*1 7 114 5 "444%/1 ‘ 4l ‘ 41i4.3 il / 4 41 / 4 **44 4 14 4\34 4k*444\11 i° 8 5404 X ( C (C t 4 #\4l4 i 4.A 4 \ 4 • ik., ot\\ 41 4i 4 % NtN 1 14 4 7 4,•, 4, 4 '‘< /%1 IN ._ N Police list possible arson as cause of apartment fire About 30 residents evacuated their three-story apartment building at 754 W. Whitehall Rd. when a basement fire caused heavy smoke early Sunday morning, Dave Hamilton of the Alpha Fire Company said. The State College Police Department, which listed the possible cause of the fire as arson, said that the fire is under in vestigation. Alpha firefighters responded to the call at 2:30 a.m. and remained at the scene for one and a half hours, Hamilton said. The residents evacuated the building when a house alarm system went off. No one was inside when the firefighters arrived, he said. No injuries were reported and the residents were allowed back in the building a short while later. The smoke caused moderate damage, he said. FEATURING: Red Rose Cotillion HETZEL UNION BOARD thingsrightbijoiningintheneighborhoodplant- a dangerous motor bike scandal. (60 mins.) litg spree. 10:30 in FOCUS: NEW JERSEY ni GOSSIP COLUMNIST The story of Dina 11:00 0 MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT Moran, a beautiful journalist - turned gossip 0 M.A.S.H. columnist caughtupinaHollywoodpowerstrug- 3 - 3 1 (1) IN a a NEWS gle. Stars: Robert Vaughn, Kim Cattral, Bobby 0 BENNY HILL SHOW Vinton.- . 0 PRISONER: CELL BLOCK H 8:30 0 MERV GRIFFIN Guests:-Walter Matthau, 11:30 M ABC CAPTIONED NEWS Sara Stimson,K,C,andTeriDeSario,Stockard 0 KOJAK Channjpg, Jeannine aurniec., , . „ . OD TRE TONIGHT_ SHOW Guest hiaatiSlich • ' EMU THESTOCKARD CHANNINGSHOW Little. (90 mins.) Stockard Channing stars as a bright and per- CO AMERICA HELD HOSTAGE sonable young career girl suffering a drought of 0 DAVE ALLEN SHOW unemployment until a friend recommendsherto COMM) CBSLATEMOVIE 'HARRYO:ForThe a consumer advocate, who is searching for an Love Of Money' A client of Harry's admits to assistant. (Premiere) stealing $25,000 from herbosawith the help of 9:00 MSONGBYSONG'OscarHammersteinWThe her boyfriend. (Repeat) 'MCCLOUD: Manhat man who was writing hit shows for 25 years tan Manhunt' Stars: Dennis Weaver, Diane before his collaboration with Richard Rodgers Muldaur. Is remembered inthis musical evening with fea- 0 ODD COUPLE Lured performers Polly James, Linda Lewis, 11:45 CC BARNEY MILLER 'Moonlighting' WhileHar- David Kernan and Elaine Stritch. (60 mins.) risstrugglesto hold down asecondjob, his 12th CO NCAA BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP precinct colleagues must cope with a minister GAME who stocks his thrift shop with stolen goods. Ce MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE 'Doctor Zhivago' (Repeat) 1965 Stars: Omar Sherif, Julie Christie. A Rus- 12:00 W SOUND OF PROGRESS The Daily Collegian Monday, March 24, 198--15 University Police Services also ex tinguished two fires early Sunday. University police, wno suspect the cause of both fires to be arson, is con tinuing investigation. At about 1 a.m. a dry evergreen branch was lit and thrown on the porch of the University Golf Shop near the White Golf Course, University police reported. Alpha Fire Company was called but the call was cancelled before the firefighters arrived at the scene, Hamilton said. A second fire occurred when curtains were ignited in the television room on the ground floor of Snyder Hall, University police said. The fire spfead to the ceiling tiles before police ex tinguished it at 3:30 a.m. University police said the extent of the damage caused by both fires was unknown. -by Suzanne Klinedinst 1:2 ss Box 1)0X